Lebanese TV star: my life after the bomb
Matthew Bannister speaks to the TV anchor who lost an arm and a leg; the girl who refused to speak; the ghost-writer for cult escapees and the boy who invented a lion scarer.
May Chidiac was one of Lebanon's star TV anchors. Her outspoken political views won her a number of enemies, and in 2005 she was the victim of a devastating car bomb attack. She nearly died from her injuries, and ended up losing a leg and her forearm. She went through extensive rehabilitation in France and returned to Lebanon the following year, where she decided to carry on with her work as a journalist.
13-year-old Richard Turere belongs to a Masai community who rear cattle on the southern unfenced edge of the Nairobi National Park. Lion attacks on their livestock were a big problem until Richard invented a system of flashing lights to keep the lions at bay. As a result he's been awarded a scholarship to an elite school.
At the age of two Sheri Pitman stopped talking to anyone outside her home in Kent in the east of England. She didn't start again until ten years later. What she had is called "selective mutism", a disorder in which children feel unable to speak in certain situations. It was triggered by what was for her a traumatic event at nursery. Sheri's now 21, and happily does talk and she joins Matthew in the studio.
American writer Lisa Pulitzer used to be a crime reporter on a local newspaper, but has since carved out a surprising niche for herself in the literary world - she's the go-to ghost-writer for escapees of religious cults. Her subjects must overcome their inability to trust anyone following their traumatic experiences in order to share their stories with Lisa so she can write them down.
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Richard Turere
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- Tue 23 Apr 2013 11:05GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
- Tue 23 Apr 2013 21:05GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
- Wed 24 Apr 2013 02:05GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online